Nction constituted by suggested learning activities and the requirements of the learning environment from the foundation and AR characteristics can amend the gap in the learning outcomes and medical learners’ personal paradigms. The learning outcome, which combines Miller’s pyramid and Bloom’s taxonomy, can clarify the objectives and expectations and avoid teaching pitched at the wrong level [29]. Furthermore, we used a global health challenge–antibiotic resistance–as an application example and chose one important aspect that is the general practitioners’ rational use of antibiotics, to which to apply the MARE framework. With this framework, the expected abilities of GPs’ rational use of antibiotics are described specifically and may easily be executed and evaluated. The abilities were compared with the GP personal paradigm to solidify GP practical learning objectives and to help design learning environments and activities. Future work will focus on the Biotin-VAD-FMK web implementation of the proposed framework by developing a mobile phone-based AR app for GP training and for conducting evaluations in China.ConclusionsDue to the traditional teaching focus on recalling facts, health care professionals face the challenge of transforming Sinensetin biological activity knowledge into practice in health care settings. AR could provide a means to resolve this challenge, but it lacked a theory-guided design. Most AR apps still use traditional learning activities–see one,Conflicts of InterestNone declared.
REFLECTIONS: NEUROLOGY AND THE HUMANITIES Section Editor Michael H. Brooke, MDReflections for FebruaryMatthew B. Jensen, MD Erika L. Janik, MAWHAT’S WRONG WITH EVERYBODY?Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Matthew B. Jensen, Comprehensive Stroke Program, Department of Neurology, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, 1685 Highland Ave., Room 7273, Madison, WI 53705-2281 [email protected] wife and I at the breakfast table Sunday paper between us, describing a disaster somewhere, she concludes with, “The people ate can six fizzle.” “What?” I ask, looking up from the funny pages. Puzzled, she looks at me. “Worm didn’t hake Monday.” I laugh at this strange joke from my oldest friend, but stop when her face grows concerned. I try to ask her what’s wrong, but she ignores my question, blabbering more gibberish with a straight face. I rise to call 911 but she beats me to it. The paramedics arrive and I tell them what happened, but they ignore me, shining a light in my eyes, instructing me to “fop hund rund sun.” No, you idiots, there’s something wrong with my wife! In the Emergency Room a parade of doctors, nurses, others, ignoring my questions, talking among themselves, gobbletygook, claptrap, nonsense. Is this a big joke? Have we been attacked by nerve gas and I’m the only one immune? Who can I call for this, the Pentagon? They give me something through the IV, my wife holds my hand crying. The doctor returns to my room, on his last visit he earnestly told me to “zip the wachet unto three foamy.” I ask him for the thousandth time what is going on, but this time he looks at me, smiles, and says, “Good, now tell me your name.”Supported by grant 1UL1RR025011 from the Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) program of the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR), NIH. 582 Copyright ?2011 by AAN Enterprises, Inc.
Two populations of neurons in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus (ARH) play an essential role in the regulation of energy h.Nction constituted by suggested learning activities and the requirements of the learning environment from the foundation and AR characteristics can amend the gap in the learning outcomes and medical learners’ personal paradigms. The learning outcome, which combines Miller’s pyramid and Bloom’s taxonomy, can clarify the objectives and expectations and avoid teaching pitched at the wrong level [29]. Furthermore, we used a global health challenge–antibiotic resistance–as an application example and chose one important aspect that is the general practitioners’ rational use of antibiotics, to which to apply the MARE framework. With this framework, the expected abilities of GPs’ rational use of antibiotics are described specifically and may easily be executed and evaluated. The abilities were compared with the GP personal paradigm to solidify GP practical learning objectives and to help design learning environments and activities. Future work will focus on the implementation of the proposed framework by developing a mobile phone-based AR app for GP training and for conducting evaluations in China.ConclusionsDue to the traditional teaching focus on recalling facts, health care professionals face the challenge of transforming knowledge into practice in health care settings. AR could provide a means to resolve this challenge, but it lacked a theory-guided design. Most AR apps still use traditional learning activities–see one,Conflicts of InterestNone declared.
REFLECTIONS: NEUROLOGY AND THE HUMANITIES Section Editor Michael H. Brooke, MDReflections for FebruaryMatthew B. Jensen, MD Erika L. Janik, MAWHAT’S WRONG WITH EVERYBODY?Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Matthew B. Jensen, Comprehensive Stroke Program, Department of Neurology, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, 1685 Highland Ave., Room 7273, Madison, WI 53705-2281 [email protected] wife and I at the breakfast table Sunday paper between us, describing a disaster somewhere, she concludes with, “The people ate can six fizzle.” “What?” I ask, looking up from the funny pages. Puzzled, she looks at me. “Worm didn’t hake Monday.” I laugh at this strange joke from my oldest friend, but stop when her face grows concerned. I try to ask her what’s wrong, but she ignores my question, blabbering more gibberish with a straight face. I rise to call 911 but she beats me to it. The paramedics arrive and I tell them what happened, but they ignore me, shining a light in my eyes, instructing me to “fop hund rund sun.” No, you idiots, there’s something wrong with my wife! In the Emergency Room a parade of doctors, nurses, others, ignoring my questions, talking among themselves, gobbletygook, claptrap, nonsense. Is this a big joke? Have we been attacked by nerve gas and I’m the only one immune? Who can I call for this, the Pentagon? They give me something through the IV, my wife holds my hand crying. The doctor returns to my room, on his last visit he earnestly told me to “zip the wachet unto three foamy.” I ask him for the thousandth time what is going on, but this time he looks at me, smiles, and says, “Good, now tell me your name.”Supported by grant 1UL1RR025011 from the Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) program of the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR), NIH. 582 Copyright ?2011 by AAN Enterprises, Inc.
Two populations of neurons in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus (ARH) play an essential role in the regulation of energy h.